goldenpanda
New Member
And how is that any problem for us, a bunch of ships with no CV air cover for itself, or for Taiwan?Not if what is being stirred up is the hunter killer screen which doesn't have any carrier with it.
And how is that any problem for us, a bunch of ships with no CV air cover for itself, or for Taiwan?Not if what is being stirred up is the hunter killer screen which doesn't have any carrier with it.
The CSF's do their work. And the ASW groups do their work. Not necessarily part of the same continuous group, but more likely discrete groups. Anyway, I would use SSN's for sanitising and screening - with destroyer squadrons hunting down those SSK's used in a blue water environment.And how is that any problem for us, a bunch of ships with no CV air cover for itself, or for Taiwan?
Goldenpanda,Subs will not attack carriers by themselves. They are used for detection and will coordinate their attack with aircraft. It's hard to imagine a CSF of several dozen ships performing ASW cannot be picked up. Submarines have a purpose to "stir" the signals emission from a CSF. It is not like WWII, where finding the carrier is the big challenge anymore.
Taiwan will have little air force left after the opening salvo of BM's. They have no where else to put their planes. China has all the intel we need on a tiny island with considerable fifth column. Taiwan is so aware of this, they turned to build laptops rather than continue their indigenous fighter program. They don't even buy all the planes USA will sell to them. Think how much resistance Holland put up against Germany.
And what kind of sensors is it using and how does it relay it?Well unless you suddenly have something to take out sats in GEO orbit, that sub is going to be completely silent as far as you know about it.
So yeah our AWACS can pick up 3m^2 at 400km. Really if you think detection is a problem you'll be going home without the CV's.
Hey easy on me now . I'm not American.Hey I never said it'd be easy. But you seem to be all bravado about bringing a 100k ton metal against several billion tons of earth. We can sink you. You can't sink us. That's how the battle works. If Israeli crews can fall asleep, if Darth can believe a diesel engine will power his chemical laser, something's going to take you to the bottom of the sea before we say give up.
Please, pay attention to the responses. Everyone here with even a scintilla of technical competence has suggested to you that no CSF commander is going to set sail for PRC mainland without first rolling back your C4ISR and Logistics. And I'm not exactly sure why you think anyone is suggesting "sinking" mainland China. If you are talking about a war of absolutes, its more akin to burning the PRC to a crisp within 6 to 15 minutes rather than sinking. Such warfare is why the PRC would be very likely to avoid a military conflict or failing that, proceed very carefully up the latter of escalation. Also, diesel engines will and do power SSLs but I'm not exactly sure why thats even being brought up?Hey I never said it'd be easy. But you seem to be all bravado about bringing a 100k ton metal against several billion tons of earth. We can sink you. You can't sink us. That's how the battle works. If Israeli crews can fall asleep, if Darth can believe a diesel engine will power his chemical laser, something's going to take you to the bottom of the sea before we say give up.
In my opinion, the US 7th Fleet surface vessels aren't China's primary concern in the Taiwan scenario, as the 7th Fleet isn't large enough to effect the battle offensively until it is reinforced. The primary concern is neutralization of land facilities and obtaining air superiority throughout the homeland and Taiwan theater, with the 7th Fleet being a secondary concern that China wouldn't have to be dealt with until day 7+.
Obviously I was talking about land based air versus CV. Did I hear wrong or did another American threaten nuclear annihilation? So losing 200 million Americans is okay as long as PRC burns to crisp. Who is the terrorist and threat to world peace now?
engage at maximum range, that has nothing to do with how long ranged the missile it is. Does it matter if a missile has 300 km range or 30 km? engaging target at their maximum effective range does not decrease in difficulty for shorter ranged missileA few, because there are different block varients. But the latest blocks currently in use (the older ones are gone AFAIK) have the longest range.
I was questioning really long ranged SAMs like SM-2, Rif or HH-9.Aster missiles can apparently intercept at as little as 10 feet (just over 3 metres).
S-300, as in Rif. The one on kirov, slava and 051C.So? Since when was the S-300 some sort of "baseline" to compare with in this sort of scenario? Besides it's a land-based system - it doesn't have to deal with the sort of low-flying missiles SM-2, ESSM or Aster have to counter.
They are not the same thing. C-803 does not exist. It's similar to C-802, although not identical either.By the way, what do you mean "YJ-83 (not C-803)"? According to Sinodefence.com they're the same thing.
China doesn't even need to take out any American satellite, it just needs to blow up all of its own satellites + Taiwanese ones in LEO. That should create enough debris to create plenty of problem.So the Chinese have the capabilty to take out Sats, but the US doesnt?
at present time, no, but that's because a lot of their new types of MPA, elint, jstar-like platforms just came out in the last 2 years. They are still experimenting with them. But in the next 5 years, they will have enough of Y-8 variants to maintain 24 hour coverage along the coast.I am under the impression that the PLAN doesn't have the requisite numbers of MPA and ELINT platforms to provide the sustained wide area coverage needed to locate a carrier, particularly if the carrier is operating under EMCON conditions.
well, I said the same thing with ESSM and RAM.If I am not wrong the SM-2 Blk IIIB has demonstrated a capability to intercept USN targets used to emulate the Sunburns. And the Sunburn travels at 7m above water level in its terminal phase. Besides, the SM-2 is not the weapon of choice when facing the YJ-83. Those would be the ESSM and the RAM.
sure, the sunburn seeker is far from the latest seeker out there. Going at mach2.x also gives it much less time to lock on to the target.I've noticed mention of decoys earlier in this thread and I wonder whether a decoy like Nulka would have any real chance of success against missiles like the Sunburn? I would have thought that this would be another important part of any layered anti missile defence system.
It's interesting, if a conflict happens around Taiwan, I would expect the two of the main launch platforms of YJ-83s to be JH-7/A and type 22s. I'm probably totally wrong here, but it seems to me that the launching platforms themselves in many scenarios would be out of sight when they launch the missiles. Especially in the case of type 22s, when datalinked with Y-8s and other aerial assets, they don't need to get really close to the targets before firing.In other words, I would never assume a YJ-83 would be tracked at launch
In a way, I think China would trade SM-2 for YJ-83. YJ-83 should be cheaper to produce. Especially if you are facing 8 022s (the typical size of a pack of 022s), you could end up with a situation where you don't have enough SM-2 left to intercept YJ-83s. That's assuming a 1 to 1 exchange (some YJ-83s would miss the target due to ECM and multiple SM-2 or ESSM for that matter needed to destroy some on target ones).In which case CEC would allow for a long ranged SAM like SM-2 to go after the YJ-83.